Fri Apr 23, 2021, 05:41 PM
applegrove (111,036 posts)
(WOW!) Public Statement from Historians at the University of Toronto, April 21, 2021
Public Statement from Historians at the University of Toronto, April 21, 2021
April 22, 2021 by Faculty members at the University of Toronto "SNIP...... As faculty of the University of Toronto’s History Department, we join with hundreds of our colleagues in the fields of health and medicine in condemning the Government of Ontario’s refusal, through 13 months of this devastating pandemic, to even consider funding paid sick leave and paid time off for vaccinations for essential workers in this province. While the April 20th announcement extends the hope that a plan is finally coming, it is critical to remember that this government has repeatedly refused to implement these policies despite multiple calls to do so from the members of its own COVID-19 Science Table, leading public health experts, as well as ER and ICU physicians. The provincial government’s evident disregard for scientific advice is costing the health and lives of the most vulnerable Ontarians, many of whom are racialized people, immigrants, women, single parents, the homeless, the disabled and the underhoused. The government, in its utter failure to live up to its basic responsibilities, betrayed its democratic mandate and provoked an unnecessary political crisis. On April 16th, rather than acting responsibly and listening to its own public health experts, the provincial government sought to impose authoritarian measures that undermined democracy while doing nothing to address the public health disaster that its own negligence helped to create. Many of our own colleagues here at the University of Toronto were among those who warned the Ford government months ago that this public health emergency would come. Despite these warnings, the government willfully ignored scientific advice, forcing vulnerable people back into unsafe workplaces with no protections against this disease. The government’s decisions have now compromised one of the best public healthcare systems in the world. Every single one of the more than 250,000 backlogged surgical procedures represents a person living unnecessarily with illness and pain. Now, here we are, in peace time, watching as our health care providers face the terrible prospect of having to practice wartime medicine, triage ICU beds and decide who lives and who dies. As we write this, the province’s hospitals and morgues are filling up with racialized and working-class people and their families. At a time of global conversations about systemic forms of racial violence, the provincial government’s refusal to implement the measures necessary to protect these workers, who disproportionately face a choice between going to unsafe workplaces and being unable to pay for rent and food, is a textbook example of systemic racial violence and inequality. The Ontario government’s public health policies have allowed businesses and privileged consumers to take advantage of the vulnerability of others, a policy that we condemn, in no uncertain terms, as racist. We urge Chief Medical Officer of Health, Dr. David Williams, to support his own colleagues in the fields of medicine and public health. He has an urgent responsibility to speak truth to power and demand publicly that the government make good on its vague announcements of April 20th and implement funding for paid sick days and paid time off for vaccination for the duration of this public health emergency. Failure to act now can only be interpreted as, at best, incompetence, and at worst, a commitment to callous indifference, gross incompetence and systemic racial violence. Economies recover. The dead do not. ......SNIP" Heidi Bohaker, Associate Professor of History Melanie J. Newton, Associate Professor of History Doris Bergen, Chancellor Rose and Ray Wolfe Professor of Holocaust Studies Malavika Kasturi, Associate Professor of History Stephen J. Rockel, Associate Professor of History Funké Aladejebi, Assistant Professor of History Shami Ghosh, Assistant Professor of Medieval Studies and History Rebecca Woods, Assistant Professor of History Brian Gettler, Assistant Professor of History, Julie MacArthur, Associate Professor of History Tamara J. Walker, Associate Professor of History Rick Halpern, Professor of History Nhung Tuyet Tran, Associate Professor of History Eric Jennings, Professor of History Jennifer Mori, Professor of History Russell A. Kazal, Associate Professor of History E. Natalie Rothman, Associate Professor of History Mark Meyerson, Professor of History Nicholas Terpstra, Professor of History Luis van Isschot, Associate Professor of History Lisa Mar, Associate Professor of History Kevin Coleman, Associate Professor of History Dimitry Anastakis, Professor and LR Wilson/RJ Currie Chair in Canadian Business History Piotr J. Wróbel, Professor of History, Konstanty Reynert Chair of Polish Studies Takashi Fujitani, Professor of History James Retallack, University Professor of History Katherine Blouin, Associate Professor of History and Classics Charlie Keil, Professor of History Michelle Murphy, Professor of History Paul Cohen, Associate Professor of History David A. Wilson, Professor of History Sean Mills, Professor of History Lynne Viola, FRSC, University Professor W. Chris Johnson, Assistant Professor of Women & Gender Studies and History Mark G. McGowan, Professor of History, Principal-St. Michael's College Bhavani Raman, Associate Professor of History L.K. Bertram, Associate Professor of History Isabelle Cochelin, Associate Professor of History and Medieval Studies Lilia Topouzova, Assistant Professor of Creative Nonficiton and History Alison Smith, Professor of History Lucia Dacome, Associate Professor, Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology Elise K. Burton, Assistant Professor, Institute for the History & Philosophy of Science & Technology Joseph Berkovitz, Associate Professor of Philosophy of Science Sean Hawkins, Associate Professor Shauna Sweeney, Assistant Professor of History Max Mishler, Assistant Professor of History Susan M. Hill, Associate Professor of History and Indigenous Studies Anup Grewal, Assistant Professor of History William Nelson, Associate Professor of History Anver Emon, Professor of Law and History Tamara J. Walker, Associate Professor of History Jens Hanssen, Associate Professor of History Cecilia Morgan, Professor, Dept of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning/Adjunct Professor of History Angela Fernandez, Professor of Law and History Michael Lambek, Professor of Anthropology, cross-appointed to History Rebecca Wittmann, Associate Professor of History Andres Kasekamp, Professor of History Jennifer L. Jenkins, Associate Professor of History Janice Boddy, Professor of Anthropology and History Jayeeta Sharma, Associate Professor of History Elspeth Brown, Professor of History Mohamad Tavakoli-Targhi, Professor of History Catherine Evans, Assistant Professor of Criminology and Sociolegal Studies and History Lori Loeb, Associate Professor of History Konrad Eisenbichler, F.R.S.C., Comm. O.M.R.I., Professor James Phillips, Professor of Law and History Nakanyike Musisi, Associate Professor of History Martin Klein, Emeritus Professor of History
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Author | Time | Post |
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applegrove | Apr 2021 | OP |
applegrove | Apr 2021 | #1 | |
regnaD kciN | Apr 2021 | #2 | |
applegrove | Apr 2021 | #3 |
Response to applegrove (Original post)
Fri Apr 23, 2021, 05:42 PM
applegrove (111,036 posts)
1. Authoritarianism not going well in Ontario. The powerful owe it to the weak
to protect them from bad men. Good on the U of Toronto History Department. Doug Ford tried to impose draconian policing powers to pull anyone over in their cars while not closing down manufacturing. The police refused to act on that. Ford backtracked. But he still has manufacturing going while people have no extra sick leave if they get covid. No doubt he's being schooled in bringing authoritarianism to Ontario as he is a populist and gets advice from the US. His numbers already tanked the last time he tried authoritarian policy and practices. Then his numbers went up when he worked well with Trudeau on the first two shut downs. Now this last wave he has gone full on 'spread the virus' and his numbers have tanked again.
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Response to applegrove (Original post)
Fri Apr 23, 2021, 05:52 PM
regnaD kciN (25,556 posts)
2. You need to change the date in the subject header...
It says "2020" instead of "2021."
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Response to regnaD kciN (Reply #2)
Fri Apr 23, 2021, 06:11 PM
applegrove (111,036 posts)
3. Thanks. I erased the original by mistake and typed in 2020 by mistake.
Good catch.
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